The Fire Raisers, translated by
Michael Bullock, was produced in London on December 21, 1961, at the
Royal Court Theatre with Alfred Marks as Biedermann. The same translation was also presented at Bristol Old Vic in 1962, with Paul Eddington in the role of Biedermann.
Jules Irving and
Herbert Blau directed a San Francisco
Actor's Workshop production of
The Firebugs on February 28, 1964. Bullock's translation was also staged by the
Edinburgh Gateway Company in the autumn of 1964. Also in 1964, the play was put on at Lawrence College (now Lawrence University).
Mordecai Gorelik, research professor of theater at
Southern Illinois University (SIU), wrote the authorized English translation and directed it to positive reviews in 1964 while a visiting professor at
California State University, Los Angeles, and again June 1–5, 1965, at SIU. The inmates of
San Quentin Prison staged
The Firebugs in June 1965. The first United States performance that included the epilogue was directed by
Edwin Duerr on May 16, 1968, at
California State College, Fullerton. A new translation of the play by
Alistair Beaton entitled
The Arsonists, featuring
Benedict Cumberbatch, was produced at London's
Royal Court Theatre in November 2007, under the direction of
Ramin Gray. It was also performed in 1968 at the
Bristol Old Vic with
Tim Pigott-Smith as one of the Fireraisers. The play has been adapted into the opera
Biedermann und die Brandstifter by
Šimon Voseček (premiered in 2013 at the
Neue Oper Wien in
Vienna). The English version
Biedermann and the Arsonists, translated by
David Pountney, was performed at the Independent Opera at
Sadler's Wells in November 2015. (director: Max Hoehn, conductor: Tim Redmond). In September 2017, Washington's
Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company produced an updated staging of the play, almost immediately after the election of
Donald Trump. The script was from the translation by Alistair Beaton and directed by Michael Garcés. The theater cast their artistic director Howard Shalwitzof as the lead actor. ==Notes==